Robin Hood’s Bay is a fairy-tale fishing village clinging to the North
Yorkshire cliffs. It is located about five miles south of Whitby
and 15 miles north of Scarborough on the North Yorkshire coast.
and 15 miles north of Scarborough on the North Yorkshire coast.
For a small village,
Robin Hood's Bay is well served by several excellent pubs, The Laurel Inn, The
Dolphin and The Bay Hotel, and The Victoria Hotel, which all serve real ale.
My family outside The Dolphin Hotel in 1996. Greg, Pam
& Vicki
Vicki outside The Laurel Inn in 1996
The Bay Hotel in 2004. The end of the Coast to Coast walk
which starts at St Bees in Cumbria, 192 miles away.
The Laurel Inn in 2004
Ye Dolphin in May 2007 with my son, Greg, expecting a pint.
A dramatic sea rescue,
possibly one of the most epic and heroic in the history of the lifeboat
service, occurred at Robin Hoods Bay on the 18th of January 1881.
A brig named
"Visitor" ran aground in during a winter violent storm. The Robin Hood's Bay Lifeboat was unseaworthy and no
rescue ship was available in Scarborough. It also proved impossible to launch
the Whitby Lifeboat because of prevailing winds. The only way to save the crew was to pull the Whitby lifeboat 6 miles
overland to Robin Hoods Bay. This was achieved with the aid of 18 horses, with
the 7 feet deep snowdrifts cleared by 200 men. The road down to the sea through
Robin Hood's Bay village was narrow and twisting, and men had to go ahead
demolishing garden walls and uprooting bushes to make a way for the lifeboat
carriage. The lifeboat was launched two hours after leaving Whitby, with the
crew of the “Visitor” rescued at the second attempt.
The coxswain of the
lifeboat was Henry Freeman, a well-known lifeboat man from Whitby. This rescue
proved to be the height of his fame. He was the sole survivor of a lifeboat
disaster in 1861 as he was the only man who wore a cork lifejacket. (Reference:
Scarborough Heritage Maritime Centre)
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